Ariz. Admin. Code § R18-9-G646 - Class III; Construction Requirements
A. All new Class
III wells shall be cased and cemented to prevent the migration of fluids into
or between USDWs. The Director may waive the cementing requirement for new
wells in existing projects or portions of existing projects where they have
substantial evidence that no contamination of USDWs would result. The casing
and cement used in the construction of each newly drilled well shall be
designed for the life expectancy of the well. In determining and specifying
casing and cementing requirements, the following factors shall be considered:
1. Depth to the injection zone;
2. Injection pressure, external pressure,
internal pressure, axial loading, etc.;
3. Hole size;
4. Size and grade of all casing strings, such
as wall thickness, diameter, nominal weight, length, joint Specification, and
construction material;
5.
Corrosiveness of injected fluids and formation fluids;
6. Lithology of injection and confining
zones; and
7. Type and grade of
cement.
B. Appropriate
logs and other tests shall be conducted during the drilling and construction of
new Class III wells. A descriptive report interpreting the results of such logs
and tests shall be prepared by a knowledgeable log analyst and submitted to the
Director. The logs and tests appropriate to each type of Class III well shall
be determined based on the intended function, depth, construction and other
characteristics of the well, availability of similar data in the area of the
drilling site and the need for additional information that may arise from time
to time as the construction of the well progresses. Deviation checks shall be
conducted on all holes where pilot holes and reaming are used, unless the hole
will be cased and cemented by circulating cement to the surface. Where
deviation checks are necessary they shall be conducted at sufficiently frequent
intervals to assure that vertical avenues for fluid migration in the form of
diverging holes are not created during drilling.
C. Where the injection zone is a formation
which is naturally water-bearing the following information concerning the
injection zone shall be determined or calculated for new Class III wells or
projects:
1. Fluid pressure;
2. Fracture pressure; and
3. Physical and chemical characteristics of
the formation fluids.
D.
Where the injection formation is not a water-bearing formation, the information
in subsection (C)(2) of this Section must be submitted.
E. Where injection is into a formation which
contains water with less than 10,000 mg/l TDS monitoring wells shall be
completed into the injection zone and into any USDWs above the injection zone
which could be affected by the mining operation. These wells shall be located
in such a fashion as to detect any excursion of injection fluids, process
by-products, or formation fluids outside the mining area or zone. If the
operation may be affected by subsidence or catastrophic collapse the monitoring
wells shall be located so that they will not be physically affected.
F. Where injection is into a formation which
does not contain water with less than 10,000 mg/l TDS, no monitoring wells are
necessary in the injection stratum.
G. Where the injection wells penetrate an
USDW in an area subject to subsidence or catastrophic collapse an adequate
number of monitoring wells shall be completed into the USDW to detect any
movement of injected fluids, process by-products or formation fluids into the
USDW. The monitoring wells shall be located outside the physical influence of
the subsidence or catastrophic collapse.
H. In determining the number, location,
construction and frequency of monitoring of the monitoring wells the following
criteria shall be considered:
1. The
population relying on the USDW affected or potentially affected by the
injection operation;
2. The
proximity of the injection operation to points of withdrawal of drinking
water;
3. The local geology and
hydrology;
4. The operating
pressures and whether a negative pressure gradient is being
maintained;
5. The nature and
volume of the injected fluid, the formation water, and the process by-products;
and
6. The injection well
density.
Notes
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